Debt Collection Laws in Indiana

By US Debt Wire Editorial TeamUpdated July 2026

If you're dealing with debt collection in Indiana, here's what actually protects you: a cap on how much of your paycheck can be garnished, a base amount of home equity and bank funds creditors can't touch, and a deadline after which a debt lawsuit generally can't succeed. Current as ofJuly 2026 — sourcing for each section is linked below.

This page involves real dollar amounts and legal deadlines. We've checked it against the primary statutes ourselves, but it hasn't yet been signed off by a retained, credentialed reviewer — seeEditorial Standards for how we handle that.

How much of my paycheck can be garnished in Indiana?

Indiana gives you no extra protection beyond the federal minimum: a creditor can take up to 25% of your disposable weekly earnings, with at least $217.50/week always protected. A 2026 bill that would have raised this went inactive and never became law.

If your weekly disposable earnings are $217.50 or less, ordinary judgment debt can't touch your wages at all — child support garnishment follows separate, higher limits and isn't affected by this cap. Your employer can also deduct a processing fee, the greater of $12 or 3% of the amount withheld, split between you and the creditor.

A 2026 bill (SB 197) would have raised Indiana's wage-garnishment protections substantially, but it went inactive and never passed — the standard federal-equivalent formula above remains current law.

Tier: Federal formula, no state enhancement — see the full 20-state ranking.

Can a creditor take money from my bank account in Indiana?

Indiana protects $450 in bank deposits, cash, or tax refunds — separate from a $12,100 exemption covering other property like furniture or a vehicle. Both figures adjust for inflation every six years.

These figures took effect March 1, 2022 and stay locked until the next adjustment on March 1, 2028. Indiana doesn't have a general 'wildcard' exemption on top of these — some outside sources incorrectly cite a larger wildcard figure that actually applies to other states, not Indiana.

Is my home protected from creditors in Indiana?

Indiana protects $22,750 of equity in your family home, a figure locked in since March 1, 2022 until the next scheduled adjustment in 2028.

Like the personal-property figures above, this number is set by the Department of Financial Institutions on a six-year inflation-adjustment cycle rather than changing whenever Indiana's legislature happens to act, so it climbs steadily over time.

How long can a debt collector sue me in Indiana?

A collector has 6 years to sue you in Indiana, whether the debt came from a written contract like a credit card or just a verbal agreement — both run on the same clock here.

Debt typeStatute of limitations
Credit card / written contract6 years
Oral or open-account contract6 years

Because both periods are identical, there's less at stake in Indiana over how a particular debt gets classified than in states where written and oral contracts run on different clocks.

See how Indiana's 6 years deadline compares to all 20 states.

Does Indiana have its own debt collection law beyond the federal FDCPA?

A deceptive collection practice in Indiana can trigger state-law damages on top of any federal FDCPA claim, since the state treats debt collection as a regulated 'consumer transaction' and requires collection agencies to be licensed.

That overlap matters in practice: a deceptive or unlicensed collection practice can support a claim under both the federal FDCPA and Indiana's own deceptive-sales law, which allows treble or statutory damages for repeated violations on top of actual damages — but claims under the state law have to be brought within 2 years of the incident.

Where can I find free or low-cost legal help in Indiana?

If you're dealing with a debt lawsuit, garnishment, or collector dispute in Indiana, a good starting point is the state bar's lawyer referral service or one of the legal aid organizations below — both can point you to self-help court resources even if you don't qualify for free representation.